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October 16, 1983 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1983-10-16

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The Michigan Daily - Sunday, October 16, 1983 - Page 3.
HAPPENINGS1 Kissinger meets Nicaraguan Left

SUNDAY
:Highlight
Three hundred pounds of Black Angus Steer or "ox" meat as the members
of Theta Chi Fraternity prefer to call it will be roasted beginning at 6 a.m. as
the fraternity celebrates its first annual "Ox Roast for Charity." the meat
will roast throughout the day and dinners will be served at staggered times
starting at 4p.m. at 1351 Washtenaw. Tickets are $5 and $4 for students.
Films
AAFC - Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. 7 p.m., Ulysses, 8:45 p.m.,
MLB4.
Cinema II - The Thin Man, 7 p.m., Love Crazy, 8:45 p.m., Angell Aud. A.
Cinema Guild - Gandhi, 4 & 7:30 p.m., Lorch.
Classic Film Theater - An American in Paris, 5 & 9 p.m., The Band
Wagon, 7 p.m., Michigan Theatre.
Hill St. - The Alamo, 7 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill.
Performances
Washtenaw Council for the Arts - Lute recital with Paul O'Dette, 8 p.m.,
Pendelton Room, Michigan Union.
Second Chance - Richard Thompson and the Big Band, 9:30 p.m., 516 E.
Liberty.
Comfort Inn - Louis Jackson and Friends, 7 p.m., 2800 Jackson Rd.
PTP - "Rivals," 2p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater.
The Brecht Company - "A Man's a Man," 6:30 p.m., Residential College
Auditorium, 701 E. University.
School of music - Organ recital with Ernst Leitner, 8:30 p.m., Hill
Auditorium.
The Ark - Eclerctricity, 8p.m., 1421Hill.
Performance Network - Animation workshop with Andrea Gomez, 10
a.m. - 6p.m.; "Dangerous Times," 6:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington.
Speakers
Kelsey Museum - Jim Higginbotham, Gallery Talk, 2 p.m.
Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Fred Wiman, "Wood Inlays," 4-6 p.m.,
537 SAB..
Philosophy Club - 7:30 p.m., 2220 Angell Hall.
New Jewish Agenda - Economic Justice Task Force, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m., 632
W. Summit; Steering committee, 7 - 9 p.m., 1429 Van Dusen.
Lutheran Campus Ministry - Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.; student sup-
per, 6 p.m.; discussion on human rights and Namibia, 7 p.m., S. Forest at
Hill.
Miscellaneous
Friends of Matthaei Botanical Gardens - "Fall Nature Walk and
Assistance with Leaf Collections," 2 p.m., 1800 Dixboro.
Northside Christian Fellowship - Potluck dinner and discussion of the
KGB with FBI agent Greg Stejskal, 5 p.m., 1679 Broadway.
American Baptist Campus Foundation - Classes for graduates and un-
dergraduates, 11:15 a.m., First Baptist Church.
Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum - Talk to a real firefighter, 3 p.m., 219 E.
Huron.
MONDAY
Highlight
The German Department, Cinema II, and the Netherlands-America
University league present the first of four evenings of short and feature-
length films by experiemental Dutch filmmaker Johan van der Keuken. Van
der Keuken, whose documentaries and personal film essays have earned
him a reputation as one of the major filmakers of our time, will be present at
the showings. Tonight's programs includes Herman Slobbe: Blind Child,
Lucebert, and The Door. The films, all df which are in Dutch with subtitles,
will be shown from 7:30 -10 p.m. at Rackham Amphitheater.
Films .. oMfsf ~.i - .>8}
Cinema Guild-,She and He,7p.m., Lorch. .
Performances
Guild House - Poetry reading with Richard E. McMullen and Liz Cares, 8
p.m., 802 Monroe.
Performance Network - "Dangerous Times," 7 p.m., 408 W. Washington.
School of Music - 23rd Annual Conference on Organ Music featuring rec-
tials by Wayne Leupold, Lowell Riley, Ernst Leitner, Marilyn Mason,
Michele Johns, Robert Glasgow, and James Kibbie, 8 a.m., Hill Auditorium.
University Dance Company - Concert, 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium.
Speakers
Chemistry Department - A. Meyer, "Metal Substituted Trivalent Arsenic
& Phosphorus Compounds: Stereo-Chemistry & Dynamic Behavior," 4 p.m.,
1200 Chemistry Building.
Near Eastern Studies - Hans Kung, "Resurrection of the Dead?" 8 p.m.,
Rackham Auditorium.
Computing Center - Bob Brill, "Introduction to Taxir I," 3:30 - 5 p.m., 171
BSAD; Forest Hartman, "Introduction to TELL-A-GRAF I," 3:30 - 5 p.m.,
165 BSAD.
British Language and Literature - David DeLauta, "Heroic Egotism:
The Goethean Ideal of Self-Development in Victorian England," 4 p.m., East
Conference Room, Rackham.
Faculty Women's Club - Robben Fleming, "Dispute Settlement - Alter-
native to the Courts," 11:30 a.m. -1 p.m., Michigan Room, Michigan League.
School of Natural Resources - Peter Nowicki, "Environmental Planning
in France Under Mitterand," 2:30 p.m., 132 Hutchins Hall.
Great Lakes and Marine Environment - Claire Schelske, "Evidence from
the Sediments for Silica Depletion in the Great Lakes," 4 p.m., White Aud-
ditorium, Cooley.

Meetings
Student Wood and Crafts Shop -Introduction to Woodworking, 5 p.m., 537
SAB.
Tae Kwon Do Club - 5-7 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Room.
Christian Science Organization - 7:17 p.m., Room D, Michigan League.
Ann Arbor FLOC Support Group - 7:30 p.m., 308 E. William.
The Ultimate'Za
The World's Largest Sicilian Pizza
A Benefit for the 1983 United Way Torch Fund
FRI., OCTOBER 21. 1983

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) -
Former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger wound up a six-nation Cen-
tral American tour yesterday in
Nicaragua, where he said the United
States "should not be asked to choose
between peace and democracy."
Kissinger met for one hour with
Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega
before leaving for the Cesar Augusto
Sandino airport in Managua, where he
boarded his plane for Washington D.C.

MORE THAN 50,000 leftist demon-
strators calling Kissinger "a
messenger of murder" greeted the
former secretary of state when he and
his bipartisan commission on Central
American policy arrived in Marxist-led
Nicaragua yesterday morning.
"We did not come here to negotiate,
we came here - as to all the other
countries - to learn," Kissinger said.
Neither Kissinger nor Ortega revealed
specific details of their conversation.

Ortega told reporters, "The United
States' real willingness to negotiate a
political solution is being put to a test."
AND IT will be for them (the United
States) to decide if the path of war now
being lived by we Nicaraguans - a war
of aggression by the United States -
will continue, or, instead, detente or a
political solution will be sought to the
problems that have been pointed out,"
Ortega said.
He said "We do not rule out a political

splution to the problems we are facing
'- a situation of war, and that is a
reality."
"The United States is the great
destabilizing factor and can also be the
great stabilizing factor."
Nicaragua is the last stop of a six-
nation tour by the commission appoin-
ted by President Reagan to gather in-
formation for U.S. foreign policy in the
region.

Newark-bound jet hijacked to Atlantic City

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)-A People
Express jetliner enroute to Newark
from Buffalo, N.Y. was hijacked to
Atlantic City yesterday by a passenger
who briefly took a flight attendant
hostage before surrendering, officials
said.
The hijacker, who had falsely
claimed that he was armed, surren-
dered shortly after the Boeing 737 lan-
ded at Atlantic City International Air-
port in nearby Pomona, officials said.
NO INJURIES were reported. Flight

104 was carrying 101 passengers and
five crew members, said People's
spokesman Ed Stukane in Newark.
THE FBI identified the alleged
hijacker as Jamil Robert Ambroise, 27,
of New Jersey. Ambroise was charged
with air piracy and was taken to Cape
May County Jail for arraignment Mon-
day in U.S. District Court in Camden,
officials said.
The plane left Buffalo at 9:04 a.m.
and about 9:30 a.m., Ambroise claimed
he was armed and demanded to go to

Atlantic City, the FBI said. A search of
the aircraft and the suspect found no
weapon.
THE PILOT radioed to officials on
the ground that a hijacking was in
process and officials were waiting at
the airport, Stukane said.
When the plane landed, Ambroise let
all the passengers off the plane,
keeping only a female flight attendant
behind, he said.
Ambroise took all the money in ticket
receipts that were aboard the plane and

forced the attendant to leave with him,
Stukane said. People Express airlines
collects ticket payments on board
flights.

Germany urges summit support

VIENNA, Austria (AP)-West German
Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Gen-
scher asked Soviet counterpart Andrei
Gromyko yesterday to help arrange a
superpower summit to avert a crisis
over nuclear missile deployment in
Europe, West German sources said. 1
The sources, members of Genscher's
delegation to a meeting with Gromyko
in Vienna, also said the West German1
foreign minister urged Gromyko to
meet with U.S. Secretary of State
George Shultz to ease growing East-
West tensions. The sources spoke on
condition they not be further identified.
GENSCHER and Gromyko conferred;

at the Soviet Embassy in Vienna for two
hours but neither issued a statement af-
terward. They will meet at the West
German Embassy today.
Their talks came one month before
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
plans to start installing 572 U.S.-built
Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in
Western Europe to counter a Soviet
buildup of SS-20 rockets on the border.
Last week, officials in Washington
said the Soviets had threatened to pull
out of Geneva talks if deployment
went on schedule.
GROMYKO flew to Vienna from
Sofia, Bulgaria, where he conferred

with foreign ministers of the seven-
nation Warsaw Pact, Nato's Soviet-bloc
counterpart. The ministers said in a
statement Friday that the Geneva talks
must continue past the end of the year,
but their statement left unclear
whether the Soviets will break off the
talks if the NATO deployment begins.

Burglar charged
Seventeen-year-old Michael Foster of
Ann Arbor was charged Thursday with
the Oct. 3 burglary at West Quad.
Police said Foster and an accomplice
were seen running from the residence
hall carrying a stereo cassette recorder
that they had taken from an unlocked
room. The property was located a short
time later. The second suspect is still at
large.

Lutheran Campus Ministry - Bible study on the gospel of Luke, noon,
Room 3, Michigan League.
SAGUA -2 p.m., West Alcove, Rackham.
Senate Assembly - 3:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre.
Eating Disorder Self-Help Groups - 7:30 - 9:30 p.m., Classroom 8, St.
Joseph's Hospital; Room 13, Human Growth Center, 2002 Hogback.
Miscellaneous
Joe's Star Lounge - jitterbug dance lessons, 7:30 - 9 p.m., 109 N. Main St.
Michigan Union - Fine art print sale, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Pond Room,
Michigan Union.
University Extension Service-Advanced Firemanship Training, 8 a.m.
For more info. contact 764-5304.
A-Squares - Square dance lessons, 7-8:30 p.m., Michigan Union.
Eclipse Jazz - Workshop on jazz improvisation, 7:30 - 9 p.m., Trotter

STUDENT OCTOBER SPECIAL

House, 1443 Washteaw.

To submit items forthe Happenings Column, send them. in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109

U

'MTHE RIGHT STUFF... '

Tom Wolfe's
screen in epic,

book now comes to the
visually spectacular form:'

-NEWS WEEK

-1

THE JWP n
RIGHT
STUFF

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